Pubdate: Sun, 04 Jun 2006 Source: Sunday Herald, The (UK) Copyright: 2006 Sunday Herald Contact: http://www.sundayherald.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/873 Author: Bob Wylie Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?136 (Methadone) Note: Bob Wylie is a BBC Scotland correspondent. His Hamburg report will be broadcast on Radio Scotland's Investigation at 9.00am tomorrow. There will also be a special report on Newsnight Scotland on BBC2 at 11pm ONE ANSWER IF you go to Hamburg these days you can't miss the Blue Goals. They form a modern art masterpiece for the World Cup - 120 fluorescent blue goals on buildings all over the city. When the battle for the Jules Rimet Cup is in town, Hamburg will host three matches, including a quarter final. Frank Jerke says he can't wait. He'll be glued to the television and may even try to get a ticket for one of the games. Time was when that would have been unthinkable. Less than three years ago, Jerke was down-and-out, homeless, and hopelessly hooked on heroin. It was around 7am when I first saw him on Hoegerdamm Street on the outskirts of Hamburg city centre. He's a big man. He stumbled off the bus and muttered "Morgen", as he passed me at the top of the steps. Downstairs he rang the bell at the Hamburg heroin clinic. Inside, he took a breath test to prove he hadn't had any alcohol and then he went next door into what they call the application room. There, under medical supervision, he was given a syringe with chemically pure heroin - diamorphine - diluted in water. He got up on a bed, dropped his trousers and injected it into his thigh. Head back and eyes closed for a few minutes then he got up, left the clinic and went to work in one of Hamburg's ship-repair yards. Same as he used to do all those years ago before the smack got him. "Everything is good now," he says. "I've got a nice flat of my own and a good job. Better." He laughed as he left. These days his teeth would be a credit to any toothpaste manufacturer. Jerke is one of 500 drug addicts in Germany who are on the heroin pilot programme being conducted in seven cities across the country. Hamburg's is the biggest trial. German doctors looked at the success of heroin on prescription in Switzerland and the Netherlands and, after years of debate, the Bundestag accepted a pilot scheme should be set up. The project began three years ago and was based on comparing heroin maintenance with methadone maintenance: 500 or so users were given heroin - they had to have failed on methadone in the past - and 500 were given methadone. The results were published recently. On almost all counts the heroin group did better than the methadone group. Dr Christian Haasen is the research director of the German trial. In his office, at the University of Hamburg he tells me in a matter of fact manner: "The differences between the heroin group and the methadone group are statistically significant. Those on heroin stayed in treatment longer and the drop out is less than the methadone group. They had much less illicit drug use, using street heroin and cocaine, and so have better health records." He says he knew from the Swiss and Dutch trials that there would be differences but even he was surprised at the improvements made by those on heroin. These positives also affect employment prospects. At the Hamburg clinic, 40 of the 90 clients going there for heroin are in work. Ludovic Leblanc, 32, is a waiter in one of the best Italian restaurants in the city. His take-home pay, with tips, is UKP2400 (UKP1800). He's got a good flat in the city centre and looks every inch an aspiring head waiter when he's kitted out for work. Not bad for 15 years on heroin. Leblanc goes to the clinic twice a day: before work and during his afternoon break. His employer knows. But in his kitchen 13 storeys above the River Elbe, I put it to him that, remarkable as his progress has been, he's still stuck on heroin. "No, I hope to be drug-free by this time next year," he asserts. He's on a quarter of the daily dose of heroin he took when he started at the clinic two years ago. "I couldn't have dreamed of that on methadone. After a year and a half on methadone the dose stayed the same and I would go to get street heroin almost every night." DOCTORS at the Hoegerdamm clinic say one in 10 patients is on a sufficiently decreased dose to be described as "moving towards abstinence". But the study 's preliminary figures don't show any great difference between heroin and methadone in the numbers that end up drug-free. Drug deaths, however, are different. Since 2001 drug deaths in Germany have fallen by 40%, according to Haasen. A policeman made the same point about Hamburg. Chief Superintendent Norbert Ziebarth is head of youth protection for the Hamburg police. At the rather imposing Polizeiprasidium HQ in the north of the city, he tells me that since the heroin clinic was set up, drug deaths in Hamburg have fallen from 101 in 2001 to 61 last year. The clinic, in a way, also allowed a police crackdown on what used to be Hamburg's open drug scene. There are no shooting galleries in parks or congregations of druggies in the central railway station on the scale there used to be. The police back the trial and its extension. "It works for the worst heroin users. We support it," says Ziebarth. Not everyone is of the same view. The heroin clinic experiment was introduced by the Social Democrat government of Gerhardt Schroeder. Now the conservative CDU, led by Angela Merkel, are in power. They are altogether less enthusiastic about heroin on the state. I found that out when I met the Hamburg state minister of health, Dietrich Wersich. He disputes some of the findings of the German study and questions the costs of heroin on prescription - thus far three times greater than methadone. "The results for the heroin group were only slightly better than those of the methadone group," he says, "and they may have been due to other factors than solely the prescription of heroin, like better social services support and things like that." Wersich is also dubious about what he describes as the state becoming in effect a licensed narcotics dealer. "For us to give patients a daily kick on heroin cannot be seen as a permanent solution. Instead we have to work to get them drug-free and how can you say that's being done if the government is giving them a kick on heroin every day ... and besides, will the taxpayer be prepared to pay for this?" This weekend The Lancet medical journal published a research study of the Swiss heroin clinics which have been running for 10 years. The study suggests the Swiss model is responsible for reduced heroin use in the long-term, and Swiss drug deaths have plummeted in the last decade. The Lancet editorial points out that in the same time the UK has had the highest drug deaths every year of any European country. The last official figures for drug-related deaths in Scotland was 356 for 2004. That was almost 50% higher than a decade ago. So, is it now time for Scotland to follow Germany and other European countries and introduce heroin clinics to give our worst addicts drugs on prescription? - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman